- Industry: Computer; Software
- Number of terms: 54848
- Number of blossaries: 7
- Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
Digital images created or captured (for example, by scanning a photo) as a set of samples of a given space. A raster is a grid of x-axis (horizontal) and y-axis (vertical) coordinates on a display space. (Three-dimensional images also have a z-coordinate.) A raster image identifies the monochrome or color value with which to illuminate each of these coordinates. The raster image is sometimes referred to as a bitmap because it contains information that is directly mapped to the display grid. A raster image is usually difficult to modify without loss of information. Examples of raster-image file types are BMP, TIFF, GIF, and JPEG files. See also vector graphics.
Industry:Software; Computer
A four-channel acoustic recording technique developed by the British company SoundField, Ltd.
Industry:Software; Computer
Common Data Security Architecture. An open software standard for a security infrastructure that provides a wide array of security services, including fine-grained access permissions, authentication of users, encryption, and secure data storage. CDSA has a standard application programming interface, called CSSM. In addition, Mac OS X includes its own security APIs that call the CDSA API for you. See also CDSA plug-in.
Industry:Software; Computer
A software module that connects to CDSA through a standard interface and that implements or extends CDSA security services for a particular operating system and hardware environment.
Industry:Software; Computer
A sequence of text that has a single line direction. Compare bidirectional text.
Industry:Software; Computer
The virtual address ranges available to a given task (the task may be the kernel). In Mac OS X, processes do not share the same address space. The address spaces of multiple processes can, however, point to the same physical address ranges. This is referred to as shared memory.
Industry:Software; Computer
A specification, approved as ANSI standard X3.270-1996, that defines a common interface standard between computers and devices such as disk drives, printers, and scanners.
Industry:Software; Computer
The component of Ink technology that manages the recognizer, the language model, and the Ink window.
Industry:Software; Computer
The maximum allowable signal level in an audio system. The ratio of the ceiling to the noise floor is the dynamic range. Also called dynamic ceiling.
Industry:Software; Computer